Summary

  • Earlier: Theresa May questioned on Brexit by senior MPs

  • Labour granted urgent question on Brexit legal advice

  • Minister says attorney general will give statement on advice next week

  • Labour MP reveals he is HIV positive during debate on World Aids Day

  • Lords debate school funding and tackling violent crime

  1. SNP: Brexit deal will make people poorerpublished at 12:30 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    PMQs

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Ian BlackfordImage source, hoc

    SNP Westminster leader Ian Blackford says the government's economic analysis shows that real wages will fall under the Brexit deal.

    He asks if the PM agrees that the deal will leave people poorer than the status quo.

    Theresa May says the analysis does not show that. It shows that the UK economy is strong and will continue to grow.

    Mr Blackford questions whether she has read her own analysis.

    He accuses her of wanting to take the UK back to the days of Thatcher and "believes unemployment is the price worth paying".

    The people of Scotland voted overwhelmingly to remain, he says - they want their rights to be respected and will not give up their rights. He calls on the prime minister to explain why she wants to agree a deal that will rob Scotland of their rights as EU citizens.

    The PM says there 3.3 million jobs have been created since the Tories came into power, with employment rate at near record high.

    She says the people of Scotland voted to remain part of the United Kingdom and elected 13 Tory MPs.

  2. PM: Labour want to 'overturn the will of the people'published at 12:25 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    Prime Minister's Questions

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Jeremy CorbynImage source, hoc

    On the Brexit legal advice Jeremy Corbyn says MPs "need to see that advice, warts and all" so that an "informed decision" can be made.

    He goes on to question the ability of the government to negotiate a full agreement with the EU between March 2019 and the end of the transition period given two years negotiating the exit deal marked by chaos and resignations.

    He says it's "clear that Parliament will not back this plan" and says it's time for the PM to "accept that reality, make way for an alternative plan that can work for the whole country".

    Theresa May says she "will take no lectures" from someone who had more than "one hundred resignations" from his frontbench.

    She says that "what really lies behind Labour's approach" is a desire to "cause chaos, frustrate Brexit and overturn the will of the British people...that would be a betrayal of the many by the few".

    Theresa MayImage source, hoc
  3. Corbyn questions if MPs will see Brexit legal advicepublished at 12:23 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    PMQs

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    PMQsImage source, hoc

    Jeremy Corbyn says Parliament voted for the government to publish its legal advice in full, "yet the government today says it will ignore the sovereign will of Parliament".

    He says in 2007 Theresa May wrote to the then prime minister saying the legal advice for the Iraq war should have been published in full, and asks if Theresa May if she plans to practice what she preaches.

    Theresa May says "we have been clear legal guidance will be given and we will make a reasoned statement laying out the government's decision."

    "The attorney general is willing to aid members by making a statement and answering oral questions," she adds.

  4. PM: We'll prove doubters wrongpublished at 12:20 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    PMQs

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Jeremy Corbyn says if the government is responsible for good management of the economy, why are there 14 million people people in the UK living in poverty?

    He says more than 200 chief executives and entrepreneurs have described the Brexit deal as "the worst of all worlds", whilst a private CBI email says "it's not a good deal".

    All the PM can commit to is "working to frictionless trade", but she's only offering friction and less trade he says.

    There's no confidence in trade negotiations being concluded in just two years, he says.

    What's preferable, extending Article 50 or falling into the backstop with no exit? he asks.

    Theresa May says there is an exit from the backstop and no one wants it to be invoked in the first place.

    The EU cannot agree and sign a trade arrangement with an EU member while still in the union, she says, and that's why there is currently just the political declaration.

    The December joint report was 16 pages long, she says, and it took less than a year to turn that into 500 pages of legal text - there's no reason they can't do that with the political declaration.

    Everyone has repeatedly said we can't things it, she says, we've provided them wrong.

  5. Tribute to NHS campaignerpublished at 12:19 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

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  6. Labour, the Brexit vote. And what next?published at 12:18 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    Where does Jeremy Corbyn's party stand if MPs vote against Theresa May's Brexit plan?

    Read More
  7. Corbyn: MPs 'queuing up' to reject Brexit planpublished at 12:18 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    Prime Minister's Questions

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Theresa MayImage source, hoc

    Jeremy Corbyn says that "after eight years of making our economy weaker through austerity" a "botched Brexit threatens to do the same".

    He then quotes from a UN poverty report saying that, in meetings with ministers, they appeared to see the effect of Brexit on the poorest as an "afterthought".

    He says MPs are "queuing up not to back the plan".

    Theresa May says famers in Wales, fishermen in Scotland and employers in Northern Ireland are backing the plan.

    She says MPs must realise the "importance of us delivering on Brexit" and "doing it in a way that protects jobs".

    She goes on to defend her government's record on jobs staying workless households are at a record low.

  8. 'Best deal' line attacked by Corbynpublished at 12:16 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

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  9. Corbyn: 'Not hard to be the best deal if it's the only deal'published at 12:15 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    PMQs

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Jeremy CorbynImage source, hoc

    Leader of the opposition Jeremy Corbyn says "it's not hard to be the best deal if it's the only deal, and therefore by definition it's also the worst deal."

    He says the government economic survey forecast published today is "meaningless" as there is no deal to model the analysis on, "just a wishlist".

    Refering to the Chancellor Philip Hammond saying the UK would be "slightly worse off" under the prime minister's deal earlier this morning, Jeremy Corbyn asks if Theresa May agrees with his remarks.

    He also notes that the chancellor "doesn't seem to be here to be consulted".

    Theresa May says "the analysis shows the deal we have negotiated is the best deal for the economy and delivers on the results of the referendum.

    "He calls the political declaration a wish list, but this is an ambitious, broad and flexible partnership," she adds.

    "The Labour party has six bullet points to offer, my shopping list is longer than that."

  10. Corbyn: What negatives doesn't the Brexit deal mitigate?published at 12:12 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    PMQs

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Jeremy Corbyn pays tribute to Baroness Trumpington, as well as his "friend" campaigner Harry Leslie Smith, who passed away last night.

    He says the foreign secretary has said the Brexit deal mitigates "most of the negative impacts" of Brexit. He asks the PM which of the negative impacts it doesn't mitigate.

    Theresa May says the analysis shows that the deal is the best deal available for jobs and the economy, while honoring referendum. It doesn't show that the UK will be worse off, she says.

    The biggest risk to the economy are Jeremy Corbyn's policies, she adds.

  11. Chance for PM to offer reassurancepublished at 12:10 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    Analysis

    Mark D'Arcy
    Parliamentary Correspondent

    Quite a gentle fisheries question from Douglas Ross – giving the PM a chance to offer some reassurance that she did not intend to trade away the rights of the fishing industry

    The PM’s Scottish MPs know they are vulnerable on this.

    And they provided the top-up of Commons seats which kept the Conservatives viable as a minority government, so they remain vital to Tory fortunes.

  12. Hard work ahead?published at 12:06 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

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  13. Tory MP asks for reassurance about fishing and the unionpublished at 12:06 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    PMQs

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Conservative Douglas Ross praises the PM for her "work ethic" in reaching a deal with the EU, but he says there are concerns many have, which he shares.

    What guarantees can she give MPs who have concerns about the fishing industry, and of the union? he asks.

    I am a committed unionist as he is, she tells the Moray MP.

    "We will become an independent coastal state," she says, about fishing, and the UK will be determining access to our waters.

  14. PMQs beginspublished at 12:02 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Theresa May is on her feet for the question session with MPs.

    She pays tribute to Baroness Trumpington, who died this week. The prime minister remembers her service at Bletchley as a codebreaker during World War II.

  15. PMQs: previewpublished at 11:56 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    Analysis

    Mark D'Arcy
    Parliamentary Correspondent

    “Dum de dum de dum….Backstop....der de dur de dur....People’s Vote.... diddle diddle dee....jobs first....”

    The prime minister’s Groundhog Day in the Commons rolls on, with the same people asking the same Brexit questions in the forlorn hope of suddenly extracting a different answer.

    This edition of PMQs is just a continuation of the series of Commons grillings Theresa May has endured over the last fortnight… with the extra-hot seasoning provided by the strong expectation of a government defeat in the “Meaningful Vote” debate, in just under a fortnight’s time.

    All the Brexit factions, eagle eyed, will be studying every syllable of the PM’s replies to those familiar questions, and vast speculative edifices will be erected on even the slightest variation in phrase or emphasis.

    The batting order for this PMQs is heavy with Labour MPs, which means plenty of Conservatives will be “bobbing” in the hope of being called as the Speaker seeks to even up the numbers between government and opposition – and that gives the various party factions the chance to get their points in….

    The loyalists will be talking about Small Business Saturday, doubtless with a segue to the benefits of the government’s Brexit deal; the dissidents on the Remain side may have something to say about the newly-published economic forecasts, and the Leavers will want to rubbish them.

    Brexiteers Anne Marie Trevelyan and Theresa Villiers are on the list of questioners.

    And watch out too for the Scottish Conservatives, caught in an uncomfortable political trap on the issue of EU access to UK fisheries, after Brexit…. Douglas Ross, MP for Moray, is one of the Scottish Tories whose future is on the line over this, and he is listed to ask a question.

    An interesting sub-plot is that the shadow chancellor John McDonnell has secured an urgent question on those economic forecasts, after PMQs.

    This makes it less likely that Jeremy Corbyn will major on them - although he might decide to provide a warm-up.

    And then there’s the Chancellor himself. Philip Hammond is not down to respond to the UQ, which could mean he has to slink out of the chamber at the end of PMQs, doubtless to shouts of derision from Labour….

    Or maybe he will give the entire session a miss? That’s not a good look either.

  16. Crucial bill to be discussed laterpublished at 11:52 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

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  17. Scotland secretary urges MPs to back Brexit dealpublished at 11:50 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    Scotland Questions

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    David Mundell in the CommonsImage source, HoC

    Asked by SNP MP Douglas Chapman what discussions he's had with the prime minister on the effect on Scotland of the UK leaving the EU, David Mundell says "the deal is a deal for all parts of the UK" and will protect jobs right across the country.

    If the SNP don't want to see disruption after Brexit then they should back the prime minister's deal, he says.

    He says he won't take advice from the SNP on protecting the Scottish economy when they want to take Scotland out of its strongest market - with the rest of the UK.

    The Scottish people will be asking why the SNP are so keen on forcing a no deal Brexit, he says.

  18. Forget Brexit - bar wars are causing a Westminster stirpublished at 11:43 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    There's jostling among parliamentarians over space in one of Westminster's favourite watering holes.

    Read More
  19. Finger pointing over who is 'undermining' the Sewel conventionpublished at 11:42 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    Scotland Questions

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    David MundellImage source, HoC

    Conservative MP Paul Masterton gets the Commons day started, asking about talks between the UK and Scottish governments on the granting of legislative consent motions for Brexit legislation. He asks the Scotland secretary to urge the Scottish government to stop playing political games with important legislation.

    Scotland Secretary David Mundell says the government is fully committed to the Sewel convention, external and the related practices and procedures for seeking legislative consent.

    SNP MP Patrick Grady says the government's actions suggests they are actually more interested in undermining the Sewel convention.

    Mr Mundell says the SNP are more interested in undermining the United Kingdom that protecting the interests of Scotland.

  20. Labour not happy at lack of ministerial statementpublished at 11:40 Greenwich Mean Time 28 November 2018

    Labour whips office tweet...

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